nigelmercier
RIP
- Joined
- 20 Jun 2007
- Messages
- 16,234
- Location
- Live in Kent, boat in Canary Islands
^ My house tends not to vibrate.
I still can't help feeling we get a little bit too obsessed with electrical connections on our boats. If your house is over-say- ten years old I bet if you check every power socket-outlet you will find at least one wire which just 'falls' out with no persuasion. Do you loose sleep about that? ..... but potentially far more dangerous if it happens to be the socket you plug that 3kW device into.
Houses also have ring mains making them more tolerant of certain fault types..
Sorry, but must take issue with that statement. I would consider the ring main as intrinsically fault INTOLERANT because it is based on diversity of load. If the ring becomes broken at any point the cabling may become underrated for the current it is required to supply on that side of the break. In a domestic installation there is no way of knowing if such a break in the ring has occurred without testing which is quite a palaver.
The ring-main was conceived in the 1950's as a way of saving money on (expensive) copper wire when wiring houses. Back then high wattage items such as electric heaters were far more prevalent (and suggestions were made that nuclear power would be so cheap that it would not need to be metered!!). The ring-main is rare outside the UK and I for one would not would not choose to wire a house with one today.
For the eBay pneumatic tool terminals, I'm looking at these:
http://cpc.farnell.com/jsp/level5/module.jsp?moduleId=cpc/640410.xml
http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/578099.pdf
Any thoughts?